Litcius/Paper detail

Exosomes from adipose‐derived stem cells and application to skin wound healing

Yang An, Shuyan Lin, Xiao-jie Tan, Shiou Zhu, Fangfei Nie, Yonghuan Zhen, Luosha Gu, Chunlei Zhang, Baicheng Wang, Wei Wei, Dong Li, Junhao Wu

2021Cell Proliferation467 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Skin wound healing is an intractable problem that represents an urgent clinical need. To solve this problem, a large number of studies have focused on the use of exosomes (EXOs) derived from adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs). This review describes the mechanisms whereby ADSCs-EXOs regulate wound healing and their clinical application. In the wound, ADSCs-EXOs modulate immune responses and inflammation. They also promote angiogenesis, accelerate proliferation and re-epithelization of skin cells, and regulate collagen remodelling which inhibits scar hyperplasia. Compared with ADSCs therapeutics, ADSCs-EXOs have highly stability and are easily stored. Additionally, they are not rejected by the immune system and have a homing effect and their dosage can be easily controlled. ADSCs-EXOs can improve fat grafting and promote wound healing in patients with diabetes mellitus. They can also act as a carrier and combined scaffold for treatment, leading to scarless cutaneous repair. Overall, ADSCs-EXOs have the potential to be used in the clinic to promote wound healing.

Topics & Concepts

Wound healingHoming (biology)MicrovesiclesAdipose tissueAngiogenesisMedicineStem cellImmune systemInflammationSkin repairTissue repairCancer researchImmunologyCell biologyBiomedical engineeringBiologyInternal medicinemicroRNAGeneEcologyBiochemistryWound Healing and TreatmentsExtracellular vesicles in diseaseMesenchymal stem cell research
Exosomes from adipose‐derived stem cells and application to skin wound healing | Litcius